Friday, September 28, 2018
Friday, September 28, 2018
We are
delighted to invite you to attend the inaugural lecture of Professor Emma McIntosh, Professor of Health Economics, Institute of Health &
Wellbeing
Title A Hitchhikers Guide to Health Economics: A methodological, anatomical and philosophical journey
Date Friday 28 September 2018
Time 3-4pm
Venue Senate Room, Main Building
The lecture will be followed by a drinks reception from 4-5pm
About the speaker
Emma McIntosh is Professor of Health Economics, Deputy Director of the Health Economics and Health Technology Assessment (HEHTA) Team and Director of the NIHR Global Health Group on Arthritis. Emma joined HEHTA in May 2011 to lead HEHTA’s theme on the ‘Economics of Population Health’. Emma has previously held posts at the Universities of Oxford, Aberdeen and Kent. Emma’s methodological interests span a wide range of health economics areas including economic evaluation and discrete choice experiments applied to both clinical and population health contexts. Emma has published in numerous peer-reviewed journals across a large range of methods and disease areas and co-authored the Oxford University Press handbook entitled ‘Applied Methods of Cost Benefit Analysis in Health Care’ in the Handbooks in Health Economics series. Emma has also recently completed co-editing the 5th book in the series entitled ‘Economic Evaluation for Public Health Practice and Research’.
Lecture Outline
By the early 1960s, economics was beginning to pay attention
to health issues. Understanding why market failure in health care occurs and a wide
spread acknowledgement of the need for government intervention in the provision
of health care paved the way for the discipline of health economics. The
notions of scarcity, choice and opportunity cost provided the backbone for
health economics as an academic and applied discipline both then and now. Drawing
on her portfolio of research this lecture recounts some of the key
methodological developments in the field of health economics as well as
highlighting examples of applied research as seen through the lens of Emma’s 25-year
career. By outlining research of varying methodologies, within different
disease areas and in clinical, population and one-health settings Emma
showcases the ever-evolving health economists toolkit in a constantly expanding
evaluative space.